Robbie Starbuck
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Elon Musk was a big supporter of it, and the Trump family was too.
And so it crossed a lot of political boundaries too, where it was a film that an independent can watch, a Democrat can watch.
And if you're just a rational person who cares about kids, you're going to watch it and go, oh, we have a problem here.
And it's not just about the transgender issue.
It delves into everything from social media technology, the way that it's affecting our kids to the psychological aspects of, you know, what's affecting kids today, education system and the failures inside of it and how we fix it.
That's a big part of this is like, how do we fix this?
Because we have a generation of youth that believe in God the least.
They report the highest levels of mental illness that we've seen ever in youth.
And then you've got this transgender craze that started to happen during that time.
This is a bad combination, right?
And so the heartening side of this, though, is that in the time after that movie, there was this rapid turn to God that has begun to occur in this generation.
So at the time we made it, it was the most faithless generation.
Now we're veering out of that territory.
And young men, especially in that generation, are veering toward the most conservative generation in American history among young men, which is a very welcome development.
And I think that that is a reason for hope for all of us to kind of hang our hat on is that we've got a lot of young men in this country who have been awakened to how dangerous leftism is.
I will be a part of the closing sip.
I have my Scott Adams mug here, which, by the way, for those who don't know, I got this mug like a week ago or a little over a week ago, and it is going to be on my desk until it breaks.
OK, so when we do shows, when we film stuff, the Scott's mug is going to be here as a reminder that even after we're gone, the.
the effect we have on other people can live well beyond us.
One day I will die, you know, might be tomorrow, might be 50 years from now, but one day I'll die and my hope is, is that somebody else will have been affected by my work and will, you know, have some sort of memory there to remind people that we affect each other long after we're gone.